The Guardian (USA)

Nicolas Sarkozy graft trial: prosecutor­s call for four-year sentence

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Prosecutor­s in the graft trial of French ex-president Nicolas Sarkozy have called for him to be sentenced to a prison term of four years, of which he should serve two.

The 65-year-old rightwinge­r, the country’s first modern head of state to appear in the dock, is accused of trying to bribe a judge with a plum retirement job in exchange for inside informatio­n on an inquiry into his campaign finances.

Prosecutor­s asked for the same punishment for Sarkozy’s lawyer and co-defendant, Thierry Herzog, as well as for the judge, Gilbert Azibert.

They said Herzog should also be disbarred for five years.

Sarkozy, who led France from 2007 to 2012, had told the court on Monday that he “never committed the slightest act of corruption” and vowed to go “all the way” to clear his name at the landmark trial.

The corruption and influence-peddling charges – among several legal cases against him – carry a maximum sentence of 10 years and a fine of €1m ($1.2m).

On Monday Sarkozy said he relished the prospect of getting a fair hearing after being “dragged through the mud for six years”.

“What did I do to deserve this?” asked Sarkozy, who wore a dark suit and a surgical mask under his nose, vowing to “go all the way for the truth”. The courtroom was as full as virus restrictio­ns would permit.

Prosecutor­s say he and Herzog tried to bribe Azibert in return for informatio­n on an inquiry into claims Sarkozy had received illicit payments from the late L’Oréal heiress Liliane Bettencour­t during his 2007 presidenti­al campaign.

The state’s case is based on wiretaps of conversati­ons between Herzog and Sarkozy, something the former president denounced during his address to the court.

Azibert was a senior adviser at France’s highest appeals court at the time. He never got the job in Monaco.

Sarkozy, meanwhile, was cleared of any wrongdoing in the Bettencour­t affair but still faces a raft of legal woes.

He remains charged over allegation­s that he received millions of euros in funding from Libyan dictator Muammar Gaddafi towards his 2007 election campaign. aHe is also accused of fraudulent­ly overspendi­ng on his failed 2012 re-election bid.

Only one other French president, Sarkozy’s political mentor Jacques Chirac, was put on trial after leaving office, but he was excused from having to attend his 2011 corruption trial due to ill health.

Chirac received a two-year suspended sentence over the creation of ghost jobs at Paris town hall that were used to fund his party when he was the city’s mayor.

 ?? Photograph: Martin Bureau/AFP/Getty Images ?? Nicolas Sarkozy, 65, is France’s first modern head of state to appear in the dock.
Photograph: Martin Bureau/AFP/Getty Images Nicolas Sarkozy, 65, is France’s first modern head of state to appear in the dock.

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